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Sony Reader Now Available 402

Yaksha42 writes "The Sony Reader, which debuted at CES in January, is now available for purchase on the Sony website. The six inch screen uses E Ink, rather than an LCD, to display the text, reducing strain on the eye while reading. While you can buy books on Sony's Connect site, you can also load eBooks and other text onto the Reader in a variety of formats, including PDF and TXT files. It also comes with the ability to receive newsfeeds, display JPG images, and can play unsecured MP3 and AAC music files. Additional information can also be found on the Learning Center site."
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Sony Reader Now Available

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  • by antifoidulus ( 807088 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @01:33AM (#16210903) Homepage Journal
    For example they have manga too(albeit a small selection right now). If Sony doesn't fuck it up totally it could be an interesting distribution model. But given their history in this type of thing, I don't have too much confidence.
  • by ricree ( 969643 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @01:42AM (#16210947)
    From Sony's ebook store http://ebooks.connect.com/ [connect.com]
    We will offer titles on a pay-to-own basis - similar to the way a user expects to purchase and own other digital media today. The user will have the option to purchase this content and read it on up to 6 different activated devices (computers or Readers).
    So I'll own the books so much that I get to put them on a whole six different player. Thank you very much Sony, your generosity is awe inspiring.
  • by Zadaz ( 950521 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @01:53AM (#16211027)
    Let's see, mod a troll, or respond... Never the smartest one in class:

    Clearly you've never seen e-paper in action. No backlight, stupid, it's just dark print on a white sheet. Just like... paper, just as easy to read.

    Glad to see Sony has finally released one of these in the States. Been out for years in Japan, though more expensive.

    None of the reasons you list will be the downfall of the device. It'll be two things: Sony's crappy Connect service. Sony has never been able to make any software worth a damn. And two: The same reason ebooks have never gained popularity, namely they're too expensive for what you get, and there are not enough titles to make it worth buying a $300+ device.
  • by ian_mackereth ( 889101 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @02:19AM (#16211209) Journal
    I do virtually all my reading on my PDA (Palm T3, 1/2VGA) and have for the last couple of years.

    This Sony device has some of the same advantages; potential for large number of books in hand and ability to buy books online at any time.

    However, it still misses some of the point of an e-reader vs a dead-tree book!

    Portability: it won't fit in my shirt pocket like the Palm does. Why is it the size of a dead-tree book? Because that's what people who haven't used ebooks much think that they want!
    The paperback size is a compromise between having enough words to balance the effort and inconvenience of page turning, and having a reasonable thickness for an average-length book. When turning a page requires just a minimal thumb pressure, fewer words per page is less of a consideration.

    Backlight: Sure, it shortens the battery life, but being able to read in bed without the light on is great. Or in any other environment where the light levels are low enough to cause your mother to worry about you going blind!

    Dictionary: being able to tap on a word on the screen and have a dictionary entry pop up is so useful, especially with obtuse and erudite writers. I always _mean_ to go look up words, but with ereader and a 150,000 word dictionary loaded, I actually _do_!

    Availability: my PDA is a general-purpose device and I use it as an alarm clock, an organiser, an MP3 player, a movie viewer, a calculator, a map (with BT GPSr), a note-taker, etc., etc. Because I use it so much, I always have it with me. Because I always have it with me, I always have my current book(s) and magazines available for those unexpected spare moments (or hours!) Since even a long novel is rarely more than 3-400kB, they really don't make much of a dent in a 1GB SD card.

    I often hear fellow bibliophiles say that they wouldn't like an e-book reader because they really like the smell and feel of real paper, and the tactile experience of turning pages, and so on.
    I imagine that their great-great grandparents thought that automotives were never going to be popular, because people would miss the feel of the reins and the clip-clop of the hooves...

  • What about images? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by ofprimes ( 174237 ) * on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @02:27AM (#16211253)
    Even though the website says the reader handles "Unsecured Text: BBeB Book, Adobe® PDF, TXT, RTF, Microsoft® Word; Image: JPEG, GIF, PNG, and BMPit", not on one page did I see an image displayed on the reader. This is the most important feature for me as I read many IT books on PFD that include numerous diagrams, pictures, charts, pieces of code as a graphic, etc. I noticed it said it displays 800x600 resolution with 4 shades of gray, but why are there no examples of anything other than plain text? Are images something you do not want to even display on these? If anyone has more info, your insight is appreciated. That would be the difference between me buying one or not.
  • Can you imagine? (Score:1, Interesting)

    by dryekindrew ( 1002653 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @02:49AM (#16211369)
    If this thing had audio support, it would be interesting to see electronic books with soundtracks included. Can you imagine reading a horror book, and as your turning the pages the music gets creepier and creepier. You could also hear al sorts of ambient sounds, depending on where in the book the charecters are. If I had money i'd patent this idea ;)
  • Re:It's great (Score:2, Interesting)

    by sankyuu ( 847178 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @03:01AM (#16211417) Journal
    I've tried out the Japanese model (Sony Librie) on demo in a shop, and I have to say this thing makes me drool.

    It is very expensive, but quality-wise, it makes other e-book readers feel clunky and painful to the eyes. And it even comes with a cover that makes it *feel* like a book. No backlight, but it conveniently runs on ordinary aaa batteries. The quality only problems are the slow refresh and occasional slight ghosting that reminds me of an etch-a-sketch. It's as close to the real thing as it gets.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @03:15AM (#16211473)
    Unlike, say, a music CD, being able to use your e-book on 6 devices is a massive value add. By default, a dead-tree book is time-consuming as hell to copy—and that's just scanning the pages as bitmaps, which basically limits you to reprinting or reading your book in exactly the same format. Throw in OCR and you have to add a non-trivial amount of man-hours to proofread the text afterwards, fix page references in the table of contents and indices, typeset any graphics and footnotes, etc.

    Think before you type.
  • by mqsoh ( 1002513 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @04:15AM (#16211711)
    I'm not buying a damned, DRMed book, but there's always Project Gutenburg (http://www.gutenberg.org/ [gutenberg.org]). I'd actually like a peripheral display using something like e-ink. It would be something I can dump text from the main monitor for long reading (like Slashdot comments) - or documentation...that'd be a relief.
  • by testadicazzo ( 567430 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @05:57AM (#16212185) Homepage
    It supports BBeB, PDF, .txt, RTF, Word files, JPEG, GIF, PNG and BMP. This covers _all_ document formats I would be interested in reading on the thing. What do you feel is missing and sufficiently important to make it "nearly useless"?

    Ogg support would be nice, but I wouldn't say that its abscence makes the product "nearly useless". If it provided a stylus or input method for adding comments and markup to PDF documents I would probably buy one. As it is, the functionality wouldn't be worth the price and clunkyness of carrying a fragile piece of equipment around.

  • by Technician ( 215283 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @06:07AM (#16212223)
    Don't lie to me and say books have the same production cost when distributed digitally and I should save a 'whopping' 11 bucks and change.

    The publishers love it. Low production costs and you get to lose the right of first sale. In otherwords, you can resell the dead tree edition when you are done with it, or exchange it at your favorite used book store.

    Your eBook? How are you going to sell the copy or even give it away? Isn't it DRM'ed to your registered display device?

    DRM, Right of first sale, etc. Don't expect me to buy the DRM content. However the electronic gadget may be useful for other uses such as stuffing a slashdot article as text so you can read it while riding public transportation to your emplyment location.

    This thing has the Apple I-pod business model. It will display non DRM content and they hope you will buy some DRM content, but the main use will not be for DRM content.
  • by nickovs ( 115935 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @07:26AM (#16212529)
    The main competition to this sony reader seems to be the Iliad from I-Rex. I think it is a much nicer reader for a couple reasons.

    It has a nice page turn interface, it has a proper paperback A5 sized screen, and runs linux. There has already been quite a bit of hacking on it. Can code your own readers for various formats etc.


    The Sony Reader runs Linux too. The manual [sony.com] says it runs MonteVista® Linux® professional edition and gives a link for download [sony.net] of the GPL bits.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @08:58AM (#16213263)
    Dude, it says right in the specifications:
    Microsoft® Word (Conversion to the Reader-requires Word installed on your PC)
    Big as life.
  • by kemosabi ( 659932 ) on Wednesday September 27, 2006 @11:39AM (#16215311)
    I've been watching the portable reader for a while and watched it slip its schedule twice, realized the screen is smaller than I thought/hoped earlier, and wished it had a stylus. What I always wanted was an 11" screen with these features and the ability to just draw ink onto bitmaps that I save. No text recognition, none of that crap. Just electronic paper (literally: just let me make marks on a blank page) and the reader funcitons. The closest I've seen is this: http://www.lib.rochester.edu/main/devices/device11 .htm/ [rochester.edu] and the goReader seems defunct and was way too expensive. So this seems like just another near miss to me. The problem seems to be that no one can ever bring themselves to offer the product I described: they start pumping up the functionality until it just *has* to cost close to $1000 or they make the sony reader, which shoots a little too low, like the previous paperback-sized reader that didn't take off --anybody remember the Rocket reader? I actually saw one in a store a few years ago. Is there any hope that someone's eventually going to make what I want? PDA screens are too small. And I don't want PDA functions. Most readers are just readers. What I want is the sony reader with a digitizer and an 11" diagonal screen. I don't even ask to annotate books. Just let me draw on blank pages. Work on the software for later. I'll even pay mark-up to add software to do more things later. Just give me that damn device, so I can avoid carrying paper documents and a notepad and not carry a portable computer. An not path $2500 for a whole tablet computer, since that's not what I want. In excess of half the business world would by my device, why won't anyone build it?

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